gas tank vent

5150abf

Vice Admiral
Joined
Aug 12, 2007
Messages
5,808
Re: gas tank vent

Open for sure, especially this time of year with the big temp swings, you want to at least leave it cracked so it can breath.

I am assuming this is a portable tank.
 

old jim

Petty Officer 2nd Class
Joined
Sep 5, 2005
Messages
150
Re: gas tank vent

No, it is a built in tank on my Tracker. Regards, Jim
 

5150abf

Vice Admiral
Joined
Aug 12, 2007
Messages
5,808
Re: gas tank vent

Still open, as I said gas expands like crazy and you could cause all sorts of problems by shutting that off, that si why it is vented in the first place.
 

Silver Eagle

Master Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Mar 16, 2010
Messages
852
Re: gas tank vent

I don't understand this question. Why would you want to open up the vent? If you do your asking for trouble .Your light ends will cause vapors to come out of the vent .This could be a good source of ignition.Gasoiline can flash at 93 degrees with no source of flame. Plus you'll pick up ant moisture in the air which will get back into the gas tank.
 

MH Hawker

Vice Admiral
Joined
Jul 13, 2011
Messages
5,516
Re: gas tank vent

boat tanks must always be vented open. On the portable 6 gal tanks to closing the vent will turn them into footballs and may cause them to rupture, and if you forget to open it when running it will collapse the tank and it may cause fuel pump damage.
 

Ike-110722

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Sep 3, 2007
Messages
408
Re: gas tank vent

Unless this is a brand new boat, a permanently installed fuel tank vent is always open. Prior to this year I have never seen a vent with a valve to shut off the vent. New boats that meet the EPA regs that went into effect on Jan 1, 2012 have a charcoal filter and built in p-trap, and automatic valves that close the vent system when the engine is not being run. But it is all automatic. But prior to Jan 1, 2012 the technology required that the vent be open. The point is to never have pressure in the fuel system. If the fuel system is pressurized, even as little as 1 psi, and you get a leak anywhere in the system, it will drain the entire contents of the tank into the bilge. Not a good thing. Even the new systems have a means of bleeding any pressure in the fuel system, but they do it without venting fuel vapors. Those are absorbed by the Charcoal filter.
 

Lawnmedic

Seaman
Joined
Jan 22, 2011
Messages
60
Re: gas tank vent

I don't understand this question. Why would you want to open up the vent? If you do your asking for trouble .Your light ends will cause vapors to come out of the vent .This could be a good source of ignition.Gasoiline can flash at 93 degrees with no source of flame. Plus you'll pick up ant moisture in the air which will get back into the gas tank.

The flash point of gasoline(the temp gasoline vapors will ignite from a flame is -45 degrees F. The auto ignition temp of gasoline(temp that the vapors will self ignite) is 495 degrees F.

The vents on portable gas tanks were designed to only be closed when moving the tank, so to not splash gas on you.
 

Cheetah 210es

Petty Officer 1st Class
Joined
Dec 4, 2011
Messages
270
Re: gas tank vent

If there's gas in the tank the vent should be open to allow vapour expansion and contaction.
 
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